8 The Developing Cell Flashcards

1
Q

how is the cell cycle controlled?

A

by cyclins

which activate cyclin-dependent kinases

which catalyse the addition of a phosphate group onto a protein, changing its tertiary structure

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2
Q

what happens if errors in DNA are detected?

A

p21 binds to CDKs to halt the cell cycle at G1 ∴ DNA can be replaced

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3
Q

outline the interphase stage of the cell cycle

A

G1: cells grow in size and mass; organelles replaced

S: semi-conservative replication of DNA

G2: energy stores increased; chloroplast and mitochondria increase

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4
Q

what is required to pass the G1 checkpoint?

A

chemicals for S-C replication present

cell is sufficiently large and has enough nutrients

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5
Q

what is required to pass the G2 checkpoint?

A

DNA has been replicated without damage

cell is sufficiently large

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6
Q

prophase (I)

A

DNA condenses into visible chromosomes

centrioles move to poles and produce spindle fibres

nucleolus breaks down

(crossing over between non-sister chromatids)

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7
Q

metaphase (I)

A

chromosomes (bivalents) line up on equator

spindle fibres attach to centromere

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8
Q

anaphase (I)

A

spindle fibres contract and centromeres split (do not)

daughter chromosomes pulled to opposite poles

(whole chromosomes pulled to opposite poles, forming 2 haploid sets)

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9
Q

telophase (I)

A

(daughter) chromosomes reach poles

chromosomes uncoil

spindle fibres disintegrate and nuclear envelope reforms

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10
Q

prophase II

remember this is meiosis only (this should be in the next chapter)

A

chromosomes shorten and thicken

2 sister chromatids joined by centromere

centrioles move to poles and microtubules form

nuclear envelope and nucleolus disintegrate

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11
Q

metaphase II

remember this is meiosis only (this should be in the next chapter)

A

chromosomes line up on equator

spindle fibres attach to centromeres

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12
Q

anaphase II

remember this is meiosis only (this should be in the next chapter)

A

spindle fibres contract and centromeres split

sister chromatids form daughter chromosomes

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13
Q

telophase II

remember this is meiosis only (this should be in the next chapter)

A

chromosomes reach pole, uncoil and lengthen

spindle fibres disintegrate

nucleolus reforms

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14
Q

how do we analyse the cell cycle?

A

flow cytometry:

  • DNA stained with fluorescent dye
  • passed through flow cytometer
  • fluorescent intensity recorded

more DNA = more fluorescence ∴ increases G1 -> S -> G2

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15
Q

what is apoptosis?

A

programmed cell death

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16
Q

how is apoptosis initiated?

A

p53 (a tumour supressor protein)

17
Q

outline the process of apoptosis

A

pyknosis (cell shrinks and nucleus condenses)

enzymes break down the cytoskeleton

CSM forms blebs

karyorhrhexis (nucleus breaks down)

cell splits into apoptotic bodies

phosphatidylserine found on outside of apoptotic bodies; binds to receptors on macrophages

macrophages engulf cell fragments

18
Q

outline the differences between mitosis in animal and plant cells

A

a: occurs in most tissues; p: only in meristematic tissues
a: cells become rounded; p: no change
a: use centriole; p: do not
a: spindles disappear completely before cytokinesis; P: some remain
a: microfilaments involved; p: do not play a major role

19
Q

what is the importance of apoptosis?

A

growth

development

cell proliferation